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0–0 Energies Using Hybrid Schemes: Benchmarks of TD-DFT, CIS(D), ADC(2), CC2, and BSE/GW formalisms for 80 Real-Life Compounds

Journal of chemical theory and computation, 2015-11, Vol.11 (11), p.5340-5359 [Peer Reviewed Journal]

Copyright © 2015 American Chemical Society ;Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ;ISSN: 1549-9618 ;EISSN: 1549-9626 ;DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.5b00619

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  • Title:
    0–0 Energies Using Hybrid Schemes: Benchmarks of TD-DFT, CIS(D), ADC(2), CC2, and BSE/GW formalisms for 80 Real-Life Compounds
  • Author: Jacquemin, Denis ; Duchemin, Ivan ; Blase, Xavier
  • Subjects: Chemical Sciences ; or physical chemistry ; Theoretical and
  • Is Part Of: Journal of chemical theory and computation, 2015-11, Vol.11 (11), p.5340-5359
  • Description: The 0–0 energies of 80 medium and large molecules have been computed with a large panel of theoretical formalisms. We have used an approach computationally tractable for large molecules, that is, the structural and vibrational parameters are obtained with TD-DFT, the solvent effects are accounted for with the PCM model, whereas the total and transition energies have been determined with TD-DFT and with five wave function approaches accounting for contributions from double excitations, namely, CIS­(D), ADC(2), CC2, SCS-CC2, and SOS-CC2, as well as Green’s function based BSE/GW approach. Atomic basis sets including diffuse functions have been systematically applied, and several variations of the PCM have been evaluated. Using solvent corrections obtained with corrected linear-response approach, we found that three schemes, namely, ADC(2), CC2, and BSE/GW allow one to reach a mean absolute deviation smaller than 0.15 eV compared to the measurements, the two former yielding slightly better correlation with experiments than the latter. CIS­(D), SCS-CC2, and SOS-CC2 provide significantly larger deviations, though the latter approach delivers highly consistent transition energies. In addition, we show that (i) ADC(2) and CC2 values are extremely close to each other but for systems absorbing at low energies; (ii) the linear-response PCM scheme tends to overestimate solvation effects; and that (iii) the average impact of nonequilibrium correction on 0–0 energies is negligible.
  • Publisher: American Chemical Society
  • Language: English
  • Identifier: ISSN: 1549-9618
    EISSN: 1549-9626
    DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.5b00619
  • Source: Hyper Article en Ligne (HAL) (Open Access)

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